Going Postal, Part Two – Going Postal (2024)

Going Postal, Part Two – Going Postal (1)

Just before 2000, I decided to give up a well-paid job and comfortable life in Japan to make a new start in my homeland. I had bought a share in a house in south London, and thought I would be able to bring my years of experience in journalism and financial translation lucratively to bear in the City.

Well, it turned out the City was not interested in Joe Slater’s portfolio of talents. After nine months of idleness, I hit the temporary agencies. And so, for the year-end 2000-2001, I became a south London postman …

A round in Catford. Mail delivery is perhaps not a job that attracts high-powered, competitive types, but you do get the odd keenie. The fellow whose round I was standing in for (not sure why) did the sorting for me, quickly and perfectly, drew me an excellent delivery route map, then drove me to the start point, pointing out the difficult ones with doors in unexpected places and so on. I began to feel I had certain mail delivery standards to uphold here in east Catford. He said he could do the whole round in 90 minutes, “not quite the record for our office, but close.”

Well, it took me four to five hours. Normally, I enjoy the walk, but this for some reason was a weary trudge. I had a row with a teenager who sat on a noisy little motorbike, just revving it for the half-hour it took me to finish delivering to that estate and get out earshot.

My partner picked me up at the end and drove me back, which was an unexpected kindness. He didn’t think it fair that postal workers should have to make their own way to and from the delivery area, which could be some way from the sorting office, and do so at their own expense. That could happen when all the RM vans were in service.

“If ever you see a postman with full sacks sitting on a bus,” he said, “you know now why. And why we strike.”

The main reason they strike, of course, is low pay. I was getting £4.50 an hour, about a fifth of my last Japan salary, and that sum did not include the waiting at the sorting office or the travelling to the delivery area — that was all unpaid. The wage was so low, I regarded this more as bob-a-job or even voluntary work. Why was I even bothering? I just needed to be doing some kind of work and getting some kind of regular exercise. I enjoyed the walking, especially at that fresh, quiet hour. But you could not just switch off, as I had hoped, and let your mind wander. You had to concentrate all the time to avoid mistakes.

I had another day in Catford. A grey, blustery morning, promising but never quite delivering rain. I was quite enjoying trudging about under the thrashing branches of the street trees and watching the fallen leaves flailing about, when I realised halfway in I had dropped the sodding route map somewhere. That meant I had to go back to the Post Office to drag the supervisor, a rather less amenable bloke than yesterdays’ keenie, out of the kitchen where he was making sandwiches. He drew me another, with much sighing and muttering about the folly of using “casuals.”

Then I took a bus back to the delivery area, feeling a right Charlie amongst the giggling schoolgirls. So, four journeys for one round, three with a full or half-full bag, as you cannot leave a sack of mail anywhere. (indeed, it might have been illegal for a mailman and his bag to be parted outside the post office.) At the end of that day, I got my first wage slip, £67 for 18 hours’ work, after deductions. I was expecting £90 or so. This was around 2000, remember.

So to pastures new. I was sent to Eltham, scene of the martyrdom of St. Stephen of Lawrence. Don’t know if I covered the actual street. What I do know is that Eltham had a lot of council housing and “beware of the dog” notices. But it was not as rundown as Lewisham. Their post office was suffering a wave of absenteeism, for unexplained reasons. I had 19 bundles on this day, which was a lot for a casual, but it was easy work as most houses were terraced and most mail had been neatly pre-wrapped up by the sorting office in a stiff-paper rent-related notice sent to all households by Lewisham borough council. That made it easier to drive the mail through the stupid felt-lining and spring-cover obstructions that make so many letter slots such a pain. Sometimes you wonder, do the owners of these slots defended like a World War 1 trench actually want to receive mail?

Most mornings, there would be a few institutional homes of some sort with an intercom system. Posties were supposed to use the tradesman’s button, but it would often fail to work. So at Clarence Road, where there was an old folks’ home, I had to wait until a carer went in to get at the letter boxes inside. A doddery bloke watched me come into the lobby and separate parcels from the letters, as the former wouldn’t fit the slots.

“Are you the postman then?” he asked.

“You don’t miss much, do you?” I replied, trying to sound jocular rather than sarcastic.

“Actually I do. I’m legally blind.”

“Yes,” I said. “I’m the postman.”

“Got a parcel for me?”

And yes, I did have a parcel for him. A folding cane, with the clear wording For the Vision-Impaired in big, hard-to-miss, letters. Eltham 1, Postman 0.

The other parcel was for a lady resident, and she gave me a Christmas tip of a quid, because “that’s what we did” back in Lancashire. This was the only tip I got in weeks of doing this job. I didn’t get many friendly greetings either.

At another institution on this beat, a gap-toothed and batty-looking woman in a gown tottered out of her care home, summoning me imperiously like a duch*ess with her gardener. I thought I’d co*cked something up — I co*cked up something every day — but she merely asked if I had anything for her. I heard this question a lot and this time, I got a bit shirty.

“Do you seriously expect me to know your name and address?”

“My name is Lady Caroline Twatt-Coffin (Well, that’s what it sounded like.) They may have put me in the funny farm, but I’m still quite well-known round here. Now do you have anything for me, young man?”

Eltham 2, Postman 0. Her ladyship wasn’t the most memorable name I came across on the beat, by the way. On another round lived Deaconess Joke Akinseye, who probably wasn’t the youngish Joke Ogunmakin Akinseye who pops up on the internet today, two decades later.

© text & images Joe Slater 2024

Going Postal, Part Two – Going Postal (2024)

FAQs

What does "going postal" mean in slang? ›

'Going Postal' means to become extremely angry, often to the point of rage and violence, especially when provoked in a workplace setting. Example of use: "Did you hear that Mark went postal yesterday at the office, after his manager told him that Jane's getting the promotion he was promised."

Is Going Postal part of a series? ›

Going Postal is the first book in the Moist von Lipwig series, but you can read the Discworld novels in any order. 'Always push your luck because no one else would push it for you. '

What happens at the end of Going Postal? ›

Gilt flees before he can be arrested; Adora is made manager of the Clacks and begins a relationship with Moist. At the end of the story Gilt, having been tracked down by a Golem the same way Moist was, awakes in Vetinari's office.

Where can I watch Terry Pratchett Going Postal? ›

How to Watch Going Postal. Right now you can watch Going Postal on Peaco*ck or Spectrum On Demand.

Is it OK to say going postal? ›

The USPS does not approve of the term "going postal" and has made attempts to stop people from using the saying. Some postal workers, however, feel it has earned its place.

What does "go postal" mean in urban dictionary? ›

Urban Dictionary definition of "going postal" -- "as. originally coined from a series of real life shootings in. the postal service, it now usually means that someone. is about to go nuts or off the deep end.

What are the clacks in Going Postal? ›

Pratchett's 33rd Discworld novel, Going Postal, tells of the creation of an internet-like system of communication towers called “the clacks”. When John Dearheart, the son of its inventor, is murdered, a piece of code is written called “GNU John Dearheart” to echo his name up and down the lines.

Why is it called postal? ›

Meaning to become uncontrollably angry, it originates in a series of events in the USA in the 1980s and 1990s. During those two decades well over 40 people were killed in incidents when workers for the United States Postal Service ran amok and shot guns randomly at fellow employees.

What does Going Postal mean Terry Pratchett? ›

Set in Pratchett's wonderfully crazed city of Ankh-Morpork, Going Postal hilariously reflects the plight of post offices the world over as they struggle to compete in an era when e-mail has stolen much of the glamour from the postal trade.

What happened to Reacher Gilt? ›

First, he sends his assassin to Moist, but he dies himself. Later, Reacher tries to interfere with the post office. But Moist proves that Reacher is a criminal and this leads to Reacher being caught and brought to Vetinari (as well as Moist himself). However, Reacher commits suicide.

What is the motto of the Going Postal post office? ›

The U.S. Postal Service has no official motto. Nope, it's not this: “Neither snow nor rain nor heat nor gloom of night stays these couriers from the swift completion of their appointed rounds.” But we certainly appreciate the sentiment. Those words are engraved on the front of the James A.

What is the ending of postal? ›

Capped off by the sudden eviction from his home, the Postal Dude believes himself to be the only sane man left and sets out to put an end to the madness in his town, which he believes originates from a local Air Force base. The game ends with the Postal Dude experiencing some sort of psychotic episode.

Why is Terry Pratchett so popular? ›

Pratchett rose to popularity in the mid-1980s with humorous, pun-filled novels such as The Colour of Magic. The decade was a high point for the “funny fantasy” movement, in which authors like Pratchett, Robert Asprin, and Craig Shaw Gardner poked fun at the fantasy genre's many absurdities.

What does the term "going postal" mean? ›

US, informal. : to suddenly behave in a very violent or angry way. She suddenly went postal and started yelling at the customers. If he calls me this late again, I'm going to go postal on him.

Can you read Discworld out of order? ›

In total, there are 41 Discworld novels published over 32 years. The books can be read in any order but for ease we have created two downloadable lists for you that may help guide you to fully explore the stories and characters of Discworld.

What does making me postal mean? ›

to become very angry and do something violent: The man went postal and shot twelve of his colleagues. Becoming angry and expressing anger.

What is the word for going postal? ›

To become aggressively or violently erratic. run amok. raise hell. get out of control. go on the rampage.

What is the meaning of postal girl? ›

a woman whose job is to deliver and collect letters, etc.

What is shipping in urban slang? ›

Urban Dictionary's definition of shipping:

It usually refers to romantic relationships, but it can refer platonic [sic] ones as well. (Just think of “shipping” as short for “relationSHIP”.) It generally uses the initials of the characters shipped or a combination of the names, though this is not a rule. AMshipping.

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